Module ngx_http_proxy_module | english русский 简体中文 עברית 日本語 türkçe news about download security advisories documentation pgp keys faq links books support donation trac wiki nginx.com | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Example Configuration
location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:8000; proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; }
Directives
This directive appeared in version 0.8.22.
Forces outgoing connections to a proxied server to originate
from the specified local IP
Sets
Enables or disables buffering of responses from the proxied server. When buffering is enabled, nginx receives a response from the proxied server as soon as possible, saving it into buffers set by the proxy_buffer_size and proxy_buffers directives. If the whole response does not fit into memory, part of it can be saved to a temporary file on disk. Writes to temporary files are controlled by the proxy_max_temp_file_size and proxy_temp_file_write_size directives. When buffering is disabled, a response is passed to a client synchronously, immediately as it is received. nginx will not try to read the whole response from the proxied server. The maximum size of the data that nginx can receive from the server at a time is set by the proxy_buffer_size directive.
Buffering can also be enabled or disabled by passing
“
Sets the
When buffering of responses from the proxied
server is enabled, limits the total
Defines a shared memory zone used for caching.
The same zone can be used in several places.
The
Defines conditions under which the response will not be taken from a cache. If at least one value of the string parameters is not empty and is not equal to “0” then the response will not be taken from the cache: proxy_cache_bypass $cookie_nocache $arg_nocache$arg_comment; proxy_cache_bypass $http_pragma $http_authorization; Can be used along with the proxy_no_cache directive.
Defines a key for caching, for example proxy_cache_key "$host$request_uri $cookie_user"; By default, the directive’s value is close to the string proxy_cache_key $scheme$proxy_host$uri$is_args$args;
This directive appeared in version 1.1.12. When enabled, only one request at a time will be allowed to populate a new cache element identified according to the proxy_cache_key directive by passing a request to a proxied server. Other requests of the same cache element will either wait for a response to appear in the cache, or the cache lock for this element to be released, up to the time set by the proxy_cache_lock_timeout directive.
This directive appeared in version 1.1.12. Sets a timeout for proxy_cache_lock.
This directive appeared in version 0.7.59.
If the client request method is listed in this directive then
the response will be cached.
“
Sets the
Sets path and other parameters of a cache.
Cache data are stored in files.
Both the key and file name in a cache are a result of
applying the MD5 function to the proxied URL.
The proxy_cache_path /data/nginx/cache levels=1:2 keys_zone=one:10m; file names in a cache will look like this: /data/nginx/cache/c/29/b7f54b2df7773722d382f4809d65029c
A cached response is first written to a temporary file, then a file is renamed. Starting from version 0.8.9 temporary files and the cache can be put on different file systems but be aware that in this case a file is copied across two file systems instead of the cheap rename operation. It is thus recommended that for any given location both cache and a directory holding temporary files set by the proxy_temp_path directive are put on the same file system.
In addition, all active keys and information about data are stored
in a shared memory zone, whose
The special process “cache manager” monitors the maximum cache size set
by the
A minute after the start the special process “cache loader” is activated
that loads information about previously cached data stored on file system
into a cache zone.
A load is done in iterations.
During one iteration no more than
If an error occurs while working with the proxied server it is possible to use a stale cached response. This directives determines in which cases it is permitted. The directive’s parameters match those of the proxy_next_upstream directive.
Additionally, the To minimize the number of accesses to proxied servers when populating a new cache element, the proxy_cache_lock directive can be used.
Sets caching time for different response codes. For example, the following directives proxy_cache_valid 200 302 10m; proxy_cache_valid 404 1m; set 10 minutes of caching for responses with codes 200 and 302, and 1 minute for responses with code 404.
If only caching proxy_cache_valid 5m; then only 200, 301, and 302 responses are cached.
In addition, it can be specified to cache any responses using the
proxy_cache_valid 200 302 10m; proxy_cache_valid 301 1h; proxy_cache_valid any 1m;
Parameters of caching can also be set directly
in the response header.
This has a higher precedence than setting of caching time using the directive.
The “X-Accel-Expires” header field sets caching time of a
response in seconds.
The value 0 disables to cache a response.
If a value starts with the prefix
Defines a timeout for establishing a connection with the proxied server. It should be noted that this timeout cannot usually exceed 75 seconds.
This directive appeared in version 1.1.15.
Sets a text that should be changed in the proxy_cookie_domain localhost example.org;
will rewrite this attribute to
“
A dot at the beginning of the
The strings proxy_cookie_domain www.$host $host;
A directive can also be specified using regular expressions.
In this case, proxy_cookie_domain ~\.(?P<sl_domain>[-0-9a-z]+\.[a-z]+)$ $sl_domain;
There could be several proxy_cookie_domain localhost example.org; proxy_cookie_domain ~\.([a-z]+\.[a-z]+)$ $1;
The proxy_cookie_domain off; proxy_cookie_domain localhost example.org; proxy_cookie_domain www.example.org example.org;
This directive appeared in version 1.1.15.
Sets a text that should be changed in the proxy_cookie_path /two/ /;
will rewrite this attribute to
“
The strings proxy_cookie_path $uri /some$uri;
A directive can also be specified using regular expressions.
In this case, proxy_cookie_path ~*^/user/([^/]+) /u/$1;
There could be several proxy_cookie_path /one/ /; proxy_cookie_path / /two/;
The proxy_cookie_path off; proxy_cookie_path /two/ /; proxy_cookie_path ~*^/user/([^/]+) /u/$1;
Sets the bucket
Sets the maximum
By default,
nginx does not pass the header fields “Date”,
“Server”, “X-Pad”, and
“X-Accel-...” from the response of a proxied
server to a client.
The
This directive appeared in version 1.1.4. Sets the HTTP protocol version for proxying. By default, version 1.0 is used. Version 1.1 is recommended for use with keepalive connections.
Determines should the connection with a proxied server be closed if a client closes a connection without waiting for a response.
Disables processing of certain response header fields from the proxied server. The following fields can be ignored: “X-Accel-Redirect”, “X-Accel-Expires”, “X-Accel-Limit-Rate” (1.1.6), “X-Accel-Buffering” (1.1.6), “X-Accel-Charset” (1.1.6), “Expires”, “Cache-Control”, and “Set-Cookie” (0.8.44). If not disabled, processing of these header fields has the following effect:
Determines whether proxied responses with codes greater than or equal to 400 should be passed to a client or be redirected to nginx for processing using the error_page directive.
When buffering of responses from the proxied
server is enabled, and the whole response does not fit into memory buffers
set by the proxy_buffer_size and proxy_buffers
directives, part of a response can be saved to a temporary file.
This directive sets the maximum Value of zero disables buffering of responses to temporary files.
Specifies the HTTP
Specifies in which cases a request should be passed to the next server:
It should be understood that passing a request to the next server is only possible if a client was not sent anything yet. That is, if an error or a timeout occurs in the middle of transferring a response, fixing this is impossible.
Defines conditions under which the response will not be saved to a cache. If at least one value of the string parameters is not empty and is not equal to “0” then the response will not be saved: proxy_no_cache $cookie_nocache $arg_nocache$arg_comment; proxy_no_cache $http_pragma $http_authorization; Can be used along with the proxy_cache_bypass directive.
Sets the protocol and address of a proxied server, and an optional URI
to which a location should be mapped.
A protocol can be specified as
“ proxy_pass http://localhost:8000/uri/;
or as a UNIX-domain socket path specified after the word
“ proxy_pass http://unix:/tmp/backend.socket:/uri/;
If a domain name resolves to several addresses, all of them will be used in a round-robin fashion. In addition, an address can be specified as a server group. A request URI is passed to the server as follows:
In some cases, part of a request URI to be replaced cannot be determined:
A server name, its port and passed URI can also be specified using variables: proxy_pass http://$host$uri; or even like this: proxy_pass $request;
In this case the server name is searched among the described server groups, and if not found is determined using a resolver.
Permits to pass otherwise disabled header fields from a proxied server to a client.
Defines a timeout for reading a response from the proxied server. A timeout is only set between two successive read operations, not for the transmission of the whole response. If a proxied server does not transmit anything within this time, a connection is closed.
If disabled, the original request body will not be passed to the proxied server. location /x-accel-redirect-here/ { proxy_method GET; proxy_pass_request_body off; proxy_set_header Content-Length ""; proxy_pass ... } See also the proxy_set_header and proxy_pass_request_headers directives.
If disabled, header fields of the original request will not be passed to the proxied server. location /x-accel-redirect-here/ { proxy_method GET; proxy_pass_request_headers off; proxy_pass_request_body off; proxy_pass ... } See also the proxy_set_header and proxy_pass_request_body directives.
Sets a text that should be changed in the header fields
“Location” and “Refresh” of a response
from the proxied server.
Suppose a proxied server returned the header field
“ proxy_redirect http://localhost:8000/two/ http://frontend/one/;
will rewrite this string to
“
A server name may be omitted from the proxy_redirect http://localhost:8000/two/ /; then the primary server’s name and a port, if different from 80, will be substituted.
The default replacement specified by the location /one/ { proxy_pass http://upstream:port/two/; proxy_redirect default;
location /one/ { proxy_pass http://upstream:port/two/; proxy_redirect http://upstream:port/two/ /one/;
The
A proxy_redirect http://localhost:8000/ http://$host:$server_port/;
A proxy_redirect http://$proxy_host:8000/ /;
A directive can be specified (1.1.11) using regular expressions.
In this case, proxy_redirect ~^(http://[^:]+):\d+(/.+)$ $1$2; proxy_redirect ~*/user/([^/]+)/(.+)$ http://$1.example.com/$2;
There could be several proxy_redirect default; proxy_redirect http://localhost:8000/ /; proxy_redirect http://www.example.com/ /;
The proxy_redirect off; proxy_redirect default; proxy_redirect http://localhost:8000/ /; proxy_redirect http://www.example.com/ /;
Using this directive it is also possible to add host names to relative redirects issued by a proxied server: proxy_redirect / /;
If set to a non-zero value, nginx will try to minimize the number
of send operations on outgoing connections to a proxied server by using either
This directive is ignored on Linux, Solaris, and Windows.
Sets a timeout for transmitting a request to the proxied server. A timeout is only set between two successive write operations, not for the transmission of the whole request. If a proxied server does not receive anything within this time, a connection is closed.
Allows to redefine request body passed to the proxied server.
A
Allows to redefine or append fields to the request header
passed to the proxied server.
A proxy_set_header Host $proxy_host; proxy_set_header Connection close;
An unchanged “Host” request header field can be passed like this: proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
However, if this field is not present in a client request header then
nothing will be passed.
In such a case it is better to use the proxy_set_header Host $host;
In addition, a server name can be passed together with a port of the proxied server: proxy_set_header Host $host:$proxy_port;
If the value of a header field is an empty string then this field will not be passed to a proxied server: proxy_set_header Accept-Encoding "";
Determines whether SSL sessions can be reused when working with
the proxied server.
If the errors
“
Enables saving of files to a disk.
The proxy_store /data/www$original_uri;
The modification time of files is set according to the received “Last-Modified” response header field. A response is first written to a temporary file, then a file is renamed. Starting from version 0.8.9 temporary files and the persistent store can be put on different file systems but be aware that in this case a file is copied across two file systems instead of the cheap rename operation. It is thus recommended that for any given location both saved files and a directory holding temporary files set by the proxy_temp_path directive are put on the same file system. This directive can be used to create local copies of static unchangeable files, e.g.: location /images/ { root /data/www; open_file_cache_errors off; error_page 404 = /fetch$uri; } location /fetch/ { internal; proxy_pass http://backend/; proxy_store on; proxy_store_access user:rw group:rw all:r; proxy_temp_path /data/temp; alias /data/www/; }
or like this: location /images/ { root /data/www; error_page 404 = @fetch; } location @fetch { internal; proxy_pass http://backend; proxy_store on; proxy_store_access user:rw group:rw all:r; proxy_temp_path /data/temp; root /data/www; }
Sets access permissions for newly created files and directories, e.g.: proxy_store_access user:rw group:rw all:r;
If any proxy_store_access group:rw all:r;
Limits the
Defines a directory for storing temporary files with data received from proxied servers. Up to three-level subdirectory hierarchy can be used underneath the specified directory. For example, in the following configuration proxy_temp_path /spool/nginx/proxy_temp 1 2; a temporary file might look like this: /spool/nginx/proxy_temp/7/45/00000123457
Embedded Variables
The
|